Publications by authors named "R C Brickner"

The shift of middle-class jobs to home settings, which occurred as a result of COVID-19 health measures that also closed schools and daycares, introduced dynamic changes to everyday life. We investigate these changes drawing on data from our study in which participants in Nova Scotia, Canada, who were working at home due to the pandemic, wrote journal entries in response to weekly prompts. Participants not only documented changes to their routines and challenges of managing work and parenting simultaneously and in the same physical space, but also reflected on their conflicted emotions about life during the pandemic and their vision for life as things return to "normal.

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Solicited journal entries are a qualitative research method with a fairly strong tradition in sociological research and particularly in qualitative health research. However, the practices and strengths associated with solicited journal entries have not been explored as frequently or comprehensively as more conventional qualitative research methods, such as interviews. During the COVID-19 pandemic we carried out two online studies employing solicited written journal entries and photos.

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Determination of the etiology of primary aldosteronism remains a diagnostic challenge. The most common types of primary aldosteronism are bilateral adrenal hyperplasia (BAH), aldosterone-producing adenomas (APA), and primary adrenal hyperplasia. Computed tomography (CT) and adrenal vein sampling (AVS) are the primary modalities used to differentiate these subtypes.

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Objective: To describe 15 patients examined for hypocalcemia, skeletal disease, or both in whom the diagnosis of celiac disease was subsequently made.

Design: Observational case series.

Patients: Fifteen patients (7 women and 8 men) were examined for hypocalcemia (n = 11), skeletal disease (n = 3), or both (n = 1).

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Renal phosphate wasting related to a tumor (oncogenous osteomalacia) is a rare disorder usually associated with benign mesenchymal tumors. In this article, the authors describe a man with renal phosphate wasting and the syndrome of inappropriate antidiuretic hormone associated with small cell carcinoma. Chemotherapy markedly reduced tumor burden and was associated with normalization of renal phosphate handling and serum sodium.

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